RISK OF EXTINCTION TO GRAY WHALES IF SHELL PROJECT CONTINUES

Environmental Panorama
Gland - Switzerland/Moscow - Russia
February of 2005

 

16/02/2005 – WWF urges Royal Dutch Shell to abide by the recommendations of an independent panel of renowned whale experts, which has warned that oil and gas activities in Russia’s Far East may drive the critically endangered western gray whale into extinction.

The panel, set up by the World Conservation Union (IUCN), concluded that existing and planned large-scale offshore oil and gas development off the northeast coast of Sakhalin Island poses “potentially catastrophic threats” to this critically endangered whale population.

Shell, along with Japan’s Mitsui and Mitsubishi, plans to build a pipeline through the sole feeding grounds of the gray whale, of which there are fewer than 100 remaining. The panel warns that the death of just one each year, out of the 23 reproductive females left, would be enough to drive the population to extinction.

WWF backs the panel’s scientific finding that the construction of a pipeline would cause noise and disturbance to the whales, physical damage to their feeding grounds, and expose them to greater risk of ship strikes. Furthermore, the whales would face a greater threat from oil spills and gas releases once the pipeline is built.

“If Shell routes this pipeline right through the heart of the whales’ feeding grounds, it is potentially condemning them to extinction,” said Paul Steele, WWF’s Chief Operating Officer. “Shell runs a serious risk of running its reputation aground if it ignores the recommendations of the world’s whale experts.”

The panel criticized the Shell-led consortium’s proposed safeguards as inadequate, unspecific and highly “questionable,” and recommended the company “suspend operations" in the area.

The area around Sakhalin is home to a wealth of rare and endangered species such as Steller sea lions, sea eagles, seals, and vast colonies of seabirds. WWF believes that it is absolutely critical to the survival of the whales.

WWF, along with more than 50 other NGOs, is also urging a bank consortium led by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) to withhold funds from the oil and gas development. The EBRD stated last year that an environmental impact assessment carried out was inadequate.

WWF is not against pipelines, per se, but this project not only risks condemning to extinction the world's last remaining gray whale population, but also brings too little economic benefit to local people and raises serious concerns for the ecology of the region.

“Investors should think carefully about backing a project that puts shareholder value above the survival of an endangered species," said Igor Chestin, Director of WWF-Russia. “Future generations will judge them on the fate of the gray whale."

NOTES:

• The coalition of NGO's lobbying for change in the project includes: WWF, Sakhalin Enviromment Watch, IFAW, Greenpeace, Pacific Environmental Resource Centre, Bankwatch, Friends of the Earth, Wild Salmon Centre, and others.

• The bank consortium, which is considering giving Sakhalin Energy a loan to continue the project inclues the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, United States Export Import Bank, and Japanese Bank for International Cooperation and ECGB.

• Of the original three gray whale populations, one is already extinct in the North Atlantic Ocean, on ehas recovered in the Eastern North Pacific Ocean, while the western gray whale is on the IUCN red list as critically endangered.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Paul Steele, Katya Pal, Claire Doole and Igor Chestin)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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